English Manor Houses
Many people like to buy, rent or sell manor houses in England. Some may want to invest in manor houses in England. Some may want to buy or rent cheap or luxury manor houses in England so they can either live in the houses or invest in the houses. Some may want to use such houses for vacation. Some may want to vacation in manor houses in the country so they can enjoy the high status that such houses may give some in the nation.
Manor houses in England are often needed for those who want to live in high quality high status houses in England. Some may want to vacation in huge manor houses in england. A manor house or fortified manor house is a country house, which has historically formed the administrative centre of a manor, the lowest unit of territorial organization in the feudal system. The term is sometimes applied to relatively small country houses which belonged to gentry families, as well as to grand stately homes, particularly as a technical term for minor late medieval fortified country houses intended more for show than for defence.
In general terms, the manor house was the dwelling house, or "capital messuage", of a feudal lord of a manor, which he occupied only on occasional visits if he held many manors. As such it was the place in which sessions of his "court baron", or manor court, were held. Sometimes a steward or seneschal was appointed by the seigneurial lord to oversee and manage his different manorial properties. The day to day administration was delegated to a bailiff, or reeve.
Although not typically built with strong fortifications as castles were, many manor houses were partly fortified: they were enclosed within walls or ditches that often included the farm buildings as well. Arranged for defence against robbers and thieves, it was often surrounded by a moat with drawbridge, and equipped with small gatehouses and watchtowers; but was not provided with a keep or with large towers or lofty curtain walls so as to withstand a siege. The primary feature of the manor-house was its great hall, to which subsidiary apartments were added as the lessening of feudal warfare permitted more peaceful domestic life.
By the beginning of the 16th century, manor-houses as well as small castles began to acquire the character and amenities of the residences of country gentlemen. This late 16th century transformation produced many of the smaller Renaissance châteaux of France and the numerous country mansions of the Elizabethan and Jacobean styles in England.
Manors of England include or have included ; Alford Manor House, Avebury Manor, Aydon Castle, Northumberland, Baddesley Clinton, Bank Hall, Bretherton, Bettiscombe Manor, Birtsmorton Court, Bitterne Manor, Bradninch, Bramall Hall, Boarstall Tower, Brooksby Hall, Burghley House, Calcot Manor, Chambercombe Manor, Chavenage House, Cheddington, Chenies Manor House, Childwickbury Manor, Clevedon Court, Cranborne, Desning Hall, Edlingham Castle, Finchcocks, Grimshaw Hall, , Hatfield House, Hinxworth Place, East Riddlesden Hall, Gainsborough Old Hall, Garsington Manor, Gidea Hall, Great Chalfield Manor, Great Snoring/Snoring Magna Manor, Greaves Hall, Groby Old Hall, Harlaxton Manor, Hartham Park, Corsham, Hever Castle, Kent, Hughenden Manor, Ightham Mote, Icomb Place, Kelmscott Manor, Kemerton Court, Kirby Muxloe Castle, Knole House, Lambton Castle, Langdon Court, Les Augres Manor, Lesingham House, Levens Hall, , Linford Manor, Little Barford, Little Snoring Manor, Northborough, Cambridgeshire, Nunnington Hall, Oxon Hoath, Owlpen Manor, Roos Hall, Rufford Old Hall, Sawston Hall, Scotney Castle, Snowshill Manor, Speke Hall, Stanford Hall, Stokesay Castle, Stourhead, Sturminster Newton, Sulgrave, The Manor House Bishop Bridge, Theobalds, Thorndon Hall, Tretower Court, Ufton Court, Waddesdon Manor, Walton Hall, Milton Keynes, , Washington Old Hall, ancestral home of George Washington, Wightwick Manor, Wilderhope Manor on Wenlock Edge, Wingfield Manor deserted, Woodstock Manor, Woolsthorpe Manor, Yalding Manor house,
The manor court was the lowest court of law in England (and in other Western European countries such as France during the feudal period). It dealt with matters which the Lord of the Manor had jurisdiction over. Its powers extended only to those living in the manor or who held land in the manor.
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